Saturday, April 30, 2016

Z is for Zimmer

 
              I am participating in the Blogging from A to Z Challenge, and my theme this year is classical music. Check out the list of other participants by clicking here! Z is for Zimmer. Hans Zimmer is a German composer who was born in 1957. Today’s featured video is pretty awesome! I figured a great way to end the A to Z Challenge would be with a bit of fun! This is a piece called “Discombobulate” from the Sherlock Holmes (2009) soundtrack, which Zimmer composed. This video starts out with Hans Zimmer himself playing the cimbalom (at least I think that’s what that is), and there are also violins, a cello, a banjo, a ukulele, an accordion, a “broken pub piano”…oh, and Robert Downey Jr. is there as well :)



Hans Zimmer crop
 
   ·   Hans Zimmer was born in Germany and moved to London as a teenager. He started his music career playing keyboards and synthesizers and was involved with a few bands, including, The Buggles and the Italian group, Krisma.
 
   ·   While living in London, he became interested in working with film music and collaborated with his friend and mentor, Stanley Myers, on some film scores. He has become known as a lead innovator in integrating electronic music with traditional orchestral arrangements.
 
   ·   After moving to the United States, he reached a milestone in his career with Rain Man (1988), which earned him his first Academy Award nomination for Best Original Score.
 
The Lion King soundtrack
from Amazon
   ·   Zimmer wrote the score for The Lion King (1994), which earned him the Academy Award for Best Original Score, a Golden Globe, and two Grammys.
 
   ·   He has written the scores for many blockbuster movies, including Driving Miss Daisy, Gladiator, Inception, Sherlock Holmes, and Interstellar, he also collaborated with other composers on The Pirates of the Caribbean series and The Dark Knight Trilogy.
 
   ·   Hans Zimmer is currently on tour in Europe, and he is performing in Poland this very weekend.
 
 
 
For this challenge, I have kept a playlist of the videos I used plus some extras for anyone who wants to hear more. Today, I’m adding the last two videos for letter Z. The second one I added is a piece called “Time” from Hans Zimmer’s score to Inception (2010). This beautiful music is put together with some lovely photos, and for me, it has an emotionally stirring quality that causes me to reflect on how all good things must come to an end.


 
I hope you have enjoyed my A to Z Challenge theme and congratulations to all who have completed the challenge this year! What is your favorite Hans Zimmer movie score?
Also, if you haven’t already, you should check out Sandra Cox’s blog with her A to Z theme of cats. Yesterday, she featured cats of fellow bloggers and my three cats made an appearance, click here for her post.

Friday, April 29, 2016

Y is for Ysaÿe

 
              I am participating in the Blogging from A to Z Challenge, and my theme this year is classical music. Check out the list of other participants by clicking here! Y is for Ysaÿe. Eugène Ysaÿe was a Belgium composer who lived from 1858 to 1931. Today’s featured video is the first movement from Eugène Ysaÿe’s Sonata No. 2 for Solo Violin, played by Ilya Kaler.




   ·   Eugène Ysaÿe began violin lessons at the age of 5, but he was not a child prodigy. In fact, he was kicked out of the Royal Conservatory of Liège due to poor performance. He continued to perform in two orchestras, one conducted by his father, and practiced violin techniques on his own.
 


   ·   When Ysaÿe was age 12, the composer-violinist, Henri Vieuxtemps took notice of him and helped Ysaÿe get re-admitted to the conservatory to study under his assistant, Henryk Wieniawski.
 
   ·   Ysaÿe went on to become a prominent and incomparable violinist admired by many composers. Claude Debussy dedicated his String Quartet to Ysaÿe and César Franck wrote the Violin Sonata in A as a wedding present for Ysaÿe and his wife in 1886.
 
   ·   Ysaÿe began to suffer from a condition in his right arm known to violinists as “bow tremor,” which may have been connected to his struggles with diabetes. Due to this, his performing declined and he began focusing more on teaching and composing.
 
   ·   He was close friends with Queen Elisabeth of Belgium and after his death, she began an international violin competition in Brussels named in his memory. This became known as the Queen Elisabeth Competition in 1951.
Eugène Ysaye a Liège
Bust of Ysaÿe in Boulevard
Piercot gardens of Liège
 

   ·   Ysaÿe did many violin arrangements for works of other composers, including, Frédéric Chopin, Camille Saint-Saëns, and some Paganini variations. In today’s piece, the movement is titled “Obsession” and an obsession with J. S. Bach is shown with frequent quotes directly from the Prelude to Bach’s Partita No. 3 in E major.
 
 
 
For this challenge, I’m keeping a playlist of the videos I’m using plus some extras for anyone who wants to hear more. I will update with the latest letter each day. The video I added today is Eugène Ysaÿe’s Berceuse, in F minor, for violin and orchestra, Op.20.
 

We've nearly made it! Only one letter to go! Whether you are a reader or a fellow participant, have you enjoyed the A to Z Challenge this year?


Thursday, April 28, 2016

X is for Xavier Montsalvatge

 
              I am participating in the Blogging from A to Z Challenge, and my theme this year is classical music. Check out the list of other participants by clicking here! X is for Xavier Montsalvatge. He was a Spanish composer who lived from 1912 to 2002. Today’s featured video is “Cuba dentro de un piano” from Xavier Montsalvatge’s Cinco canciones negras. The lyrics were written by Rafael Alberti, the soloist is Ana Belén and the music is played by the group, Trío Malats.


 

Xavier Montsalvatge
Xavier Montsalvatge is on the left

·   Xavier Montsalvatge had a significant amount of influence over Catalan music of the latter half of the 20th century.
 
     ·   He composed several songs for voice and piano, operas, including El gato con botas (Puss in Boots), chamber music, and orchestral music.
 
    ·   In addition to composing music, he worked as a music critic and wrote for the newspapers, Destino and La Vanguardia.
 
  
·   He has one piece that gained him international fame, the Cinco canciones negras (Five Black Songs), which were five songs written for mezzo-soprano and orchestra. These songs used rhythms and themes from the Antillean Islands of the Caribbean.

·    Montsalvatge’s style changed throughout his career. His early works were influenced by Richard Wagner and twelve-tone technique. He was then influenced by Caribbean styles. His later works took on more abstract and eclectic styles, with influences from Impressionism and polytonality.

Barcelona, where Xavier Montsalvatge
lived most of his life
(Picture from pixabay.com) 
Sources: http://www.montsalvatge.com/
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Xavier_Montsalvatge


Yesterday’s Trivia: Besides Star Wars, what franchise film came out last year which had an original theme composed by John Williams? Answer: Jurassic World. John Williams composed the main theme for Jurassic Park, which was used in all the films in the series.
For this challenge, I’m keeping a playlist of the videos I’m using plus some extras for anyone who wants to hear more. I will update with the latest letter each day. In the video I added today, you can get a taste of Xavier Montsalvatge’s abstract techniques with harp and guitar, Fantasia para Arpa y Guitarra: III. Brasilado: Allegro Moderato.
 

 
I must admit, I had to dig a little to find this composer. I pulled up a Wikipedia list of 20th century composers and used my browser’s find function (CTRL + F) to find the X’s on the page. I then looked for first or last names that started with X, and Voila! Xavier appeared :) Did you have to go to strange lengths to get any of your letters for the A to Z?

Wednesday, April 27, 2016

W is for Williams

 
              I am participating in the Blogging from A to Z Challenge, and my theme this year is classical music. Check out the list of other participants by clicking here! W is for Williams. John Williams is an American composer, conductor, and pianist who was born in 1932. Today’s featured video is the theme from Schindler’s List which was composed and conducted by John Williams with Itzhak Perlman playing the violin solo.



Johnwilliams2006   ·   John Williams wrote the scores for many well-known films, including Star Wars, Superman, Saving Private Ryan, the first three Harry Potter films, Indiana Jones, and many more. In fact, he composed the scores for eight of the Top 20 highest grossing films at the U.S. box office!
 
   ·   He has been nominated for 50 Academy Awards and currently holds the record for the most Oscar nominations for a living person. He won five of those nominations for Best Scoring Adaptation and Original Song in Fiddler on the Roof, and Best Original Score for Jaws, Star Wars, E.T. the Extra Terrestrial, and Schindler’s List.
 
   ·   In addition to his movie scores, Williams has composed many concert pieces, including a symphony and several concertos.
 
   ·   He was drafted to the U.S. Air Force in 1952 and conducted the U.S. Air Force Band. After his service ended in 1955, he attended Julliard and studied piano.
 
Scan of vinyl cover
released by RSO Records
   ·   Williams was the Principal Conductor for the Boston Pops Orchestra from 1980 to 1993.
 
   ·   John Williams has worked with director Steven Spielberg on over 20 films since 1974. Williams was present when Spielberg received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame and gave him a thumbs-up.
 
   ·   After watching Schindler’s List, Williams told Spielberg, “You need a better composer than I am for this film.” Spielberg replied, “I know. But they're all dead!”

Sources: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Williams
http://www.classicfm.com/composers/williams/


For this challenge, I’m keeping a playlist of the videos I’m using plus some extras for anyone who wants to hear more. I will update with the latest letter each day. In the extra video I added today, John Williams, himself, is conducting the Boston Pops Orchestra in the main theme from Star Wars.


 
Did you know John Williams composed the scores for so many movies? Which is your favorite John Williams theme? Trivia: Besides Star Wars, what franchise film came out last year which had an original theme composed by John Williams?

Tuesday, April 26, 2016

V is for Vivaldi

 
              I am participating in the Blogging from A to Z Challenge, and my theme this year is classical music. Check out the list of other participants by clicking here! V is for Vivaldi. Antonio Vivaldi was an Italian composer who lived from 1678 to 1741. Today’s featured video is the first movement of Vivaldi’s Concerto No. 3 in F major, Op. 8, RV 293, "L'autunno" (Autumn of the Four Seasons). It is performed by the Academy of St. Martin in the Fields with Joshua Bell on the violin.


 


   ·   Antonio Vivaldi was taught to play the violin by his father. They toured Venice, performing together.
 
   ·   Vivaldi was ordained as a priest in 1703 and was given the nickname, “il Prete Rosso” (the red priest), due to his curly, red hair (he was wearing a customary wig in the painting).
 
   ·   He wrote over 500 concerti, and 230 of those pieces are for violin. He also wrote pieces for bassoon, mandolin, oboe, recorder, cello, flute, viola d’amore, and lute.
 
   ·   His most popular work is the Four Seasons, which includes four violin concerti, one representing each season. The concertos were innovative because they depicted scenes including flowing creeks, singing birds, barking dogs, storms, frozen landscapes, and winter fires. Vivaldi published the Four Seasons with accompanying sonnets that he may have written himself. Those poems were meant to point out the scenes the listener was to imagine.

Gaspar van Wittel - View of the San Marco Basin
View of Venice in 1697
   ·   After his death, many of Vivaldi’s works were locked away or lost until the 20th century. Alfredo Casella helped in the rediscovery efforts when he organized Vivaldi Week in 1939.

 
 
For this challenge, I’m keeping a playlist of the videos I’m using plus some extras for anyone who wants to hear more. I will update with the latest letter each day. I couldn’t let the letter V pass by without another Victor Borge video :) In this hilarious sketch I added, he is playing Caro nome from Giuseppe Verdi’s Rigoletto with opera singer, Marilyn Mulvey. This one is priceless!
 

 
What is your favorite season of the year? Do you have a favorite season or movement in Vivaldi's Four Seasons (Spring is most often used in movies and media)?

Monday, April 25, 2016

U is for Unfinished Symphony

 
              I am participating in the Blogging from A to Z Challenge, and my theme this year is classical music. Check out the list of other participants by clicking here! U is for Unfinished Symphony. Today’s featured video is part of the first movement of Franz Schubert’s Symphony No. 8 in B minor, the “Unfinished Symphony”. It is performed by the Wiener Philharmoniker conducted by Carlos Kleiber.


 
Oil painting by
Wilhelm August Rieder
   ·   Franz Schubert was an Austrian composer who lived from 1797 to 1828.
 
   ·   As the name suggests, Schubert’s “Unfinished Symphony” was never completed. He wrote the first two movements and part of the third 6 years before his death, but he became distracted from continuing the symphony and never returned to finish it. Although, some believe that his fourth movement was the Entr’acte from the incidental music to the play, Rosamunde.
 
   ·   Schubert adored the music of Mozart, he once wrote, “O Mozart! Immortal Mozart! What countless impressions of a brighter, better life hast thou stamped upon our souls!”
 
   ·   He was very productive in his short life. In 1815, he wrote nine church works, a symphony, and 150 songs. Over the course of his life he wrote over 1,500 works, including 600 songs for solo voice and piano, seven complete symphonies, eight orchestral overtures, and seven masses.
 
   ·   Schubert was known to host musical parties called “Schubertiads” where he would sing and play his latest songs for his friends. Schubertiads would also include poetry readings, dancing, and even an occasional picnic or river trip.
Schubertiad drawing by
Moritz von Schwind

   ·   Schubert was one of the torchbearers for Beethoven’s funeral in March 1827. By his own request, Schubert was buried next to Beethoven when he died in November 1828.
http://www.classicfm.com/composers/schubert/
 

            For this challenge, I’m keeping a playlist of the videos I’m using plus some extras for anyone who wants to hear more. I will update with the latest letter each day. Today’s extra video involves another great “U” in music, the ukulele! In this video, Valéry Sauvage is playing the ukulele for Franz Schubert’s “Die Forelle” (The Trout). The lyrics were written by Francis Blanche and these are not the original lyrics, which Schubert used from a poem about fishing. In Blanche’s version, the narrator comes across a girl who is obsessed with this song. If you are interested, you can click here to read the lyrics in French and English.
 

 
Who, besides me, would love to attend a Schubertiad? Have you ever had a period of extreme productivity?

Saturday, April 23, 2016

T is for Tchaikovsky

 
              I am participating in the Blogging from A to Z Challenge, and my theme this year is classical music. Check out the list of other participants by clicking here! T is for Tchaikovsky. Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky was a Russian composer who lived from 1840 to 1893. Today’s featured video is the waltz from Tchaikovsky’s Sleeping Beauty ballet.


 
   ·   Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky was initially taught piano by his governess starting at the age of 4. He also became fluent in French and German by the age of 6.
 
   ·   Tchaikovsky was sent to boarding school at the age of 10 to further his musical studies. When his mother dropped him off, it was so traumatic for him that he clung to the wheels of her carriage trying to stop her from leaving him there.
 
   ·   It is said that this experience stuck with him his entire life and contributed to the emotion in his musical works.
 
   ·   Like Prokofiev, Tchaikovsky wrote music inspired by Romeo and Juliet. Some of his other popular works include the 1812 Overture and his three ballets- Swan Lake, The Sleeping Beauty, and The Nutcracker.
 
Original cast of The Sleeping Beauty
Saint Petersburg, 1890
   ·   You have most likely heard something from The Nutcracker, especially around Christmastime. Disney’s Sleeping Beauty uses many adaptations from Tchaikovsky’s ballet of the same name.
 
   ·   A great motivational quote from Tchaikovsky: "Inspiration is a guest that does not willingly visit the lazy."

Sources: http://www.classicfm.com/composers/tchaikovsky/
 
Yesterday’s trivia: Which of Saint-Saëns’ pieces is meant to envision Death playing a fiddle? Answer: Danse Macabre
For this challenge, I’m keeping a playlist of the videos I’m using plus some extras for anyone who wants to hear more. I will update with the latest letter each day. Today’s extra video, like yesterday’s addition, is swan-related. It is the “Swan Theme” from Tchaikovsky’s Swan Lake ballet performed by the London Philharmonic Orchestra, conducted by Yuri Simonov.


 
Are you a fan of music from The Nutcracker? Do you know any of Tchaikovsky’s symphonies, concertos, or other works?
I also want to apologize for not getting to anybody's "S" post yesterday, it has been an exceptionally busy week, and visiting blogs just was not happening for me Friday. I plan to catch up on "S" and "T" posts today, since I finally have a day off!

Friday, April 22, 2016

S is for Saint-Saëns and Bonus S

 
              I am participating in the Blogging from A to Z Challenge, and my theme this year is classical music. Check out the list of other participants by clicking here! S is for Saint-Saëns. Charles-Camille Saint-Saëns was a French composer who lived from 1835 to 1921. Today’s featured video is Saint- Saëns’ seventh movement, Aquarium from The Carnival of the Animals (Le carnaval des animaux), starring sea creatures from the Sydney Aquarium. There is also a bonus S today, stay tuned...



 
Photograph by Nadar

   ·   Camille Saint-Saëns had perfect pitch at the age of 3. In school, he did well with many subjects. As an adult, he maintain interest in astronomy, botany, geology, butterflies, and math.

 
   ·   Franz Liszt was a friend and supporter of Saint-Saëns in his early career. Liszt called him “the greatest organist in the world.”
 
   ·   In 1886, Saint-Saëns composed two of his greatest works, The Carnival of the Animals and the Symphony No. 3 “Organ.” The Organ Symphony was dedicated to Liszt and it was used as the main theme in the movie, Babe.
 
 
   ·   Saint-Saëns enjoyed traveling and spent a lot of time on holiday in the 1890s. During that time, he wrote Africa in G minor and the Piano Concerto No. 5 “Egyptian”.
 
I own this album :)
   ·   The Carnival of the Animals was written just for fun. Saint-Saëns was afraid the piece would make him appear he was not a serious composer. So after two private performances, he banned Carnival, except for the thirteenth movement, Swan. He wrote in his will that the entire piece could be released posthumously.
 
   ·   The Carnival of the Animals is often recorded with Prokofiev’s Peter and the Wolf and Benjamin Britten’s The Young Person’s Guide to the Orchestra as a collection for children.

 
 
Yesterday’s trivia: Rachmaninoff was tall and he rarely smiled for photographs, what nickname did this earn him? Answer: The “six-foot scowl”.
For this challenge, I’m keeping a playlist of the videos I’m using plus some extras for anyone who wants to hear more. I will update with the latest letter each day. The video I added today is another movement from Saint-Saëns’ The Carnival of the Animals. Yo Yo Ma is playing the cello in the very beautiful thirteenth movement, Swan.


 
Do you know any other works by Camille Saint-Saëns (he wrote many in his lifetime)? Which of his pieces is meant to envision Death playing a fiddle? Answer Tomorrow.

 
BONUS S: SEISMIC CRIMES!

As a bonus S for today, I would like to share that author and fellow blogger, Chrys Fey is releasing her first novel, Seismic Crimes. Congratulations Chrys!
 

BLURB: An Internal Affairs Investigator was murdered and his brother, Donovan Goldwyn, was framed. Now Donovan is desperate to prove his innocence. And the one person who can do that is the woman who saved him from a deadly hurricane—Beth Kennedy. From the moment their fates intertwined, passion consumed him. He wants her in his arms. More, he wants her by his side in his darkest moments.

Beth Kennedy may not know everything about Donovan, but she can’t deny what she feels for him. It’s her love for him that pushes her to do whatever she has to do to help him get justice, including putting herself in a criminal’s crosshairs.

When a tip reveals the killer's location, they travel to California, but then an earthquake of catastrophic proportions separates them. As aftershocks roll the land, Beth and Donovan have to endure dangerous conditions while trying to find their way back to one another. Will they reunite and find the killer, or will they lose everything?

DIGITAL LINKS:
ALSO AVAILABLE IN PRINT!



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